As the most heavily bombed country per capita in the world, clearance of cluster munition remnants is a long and ongoing process in Laos. Norwegian People’s Aid developed a survey methodology to address the unique challenges posed by cluster munition contamination
In two Myanmar states, Danish Demining Group and Danish Refugee Council recently conducted a landmin...
In an effort to assess the impact of clearing unexploded ordnance, MAG (Mines Advisory Group) develo...
In central Vietnam, the problem of unexploded ordnance and landmine contamination is still particula...
Efficient and effective land release is a core global priority for MAG (Mines Advisory Group), Norwe...
The February conflict at the Thailand-Cambodia border over disputed territory has left Cambodia with...
Surveys estimate that as much as 83 percent of land in Quang Tri province in Central Vietnam is cont...
Nearly fifty years after the nine-year Secret War (1964–1973), Laos is the scene of a US$35–$40 mill...
This June, the Center for International Stabilization and Recovery (CISR) partnered with Norwegian P...
The landlocked country of Laos borders Burma (Myanmar), Cambodia, China, Thailand and Vietnam
This thesis examines one man-made disaster, resulting from the plethora of UneXploded Ordnance (UXO)...
The Lao National Unexploded Ordnance Programme (UXO Lao) has established a regional office and field...
The Lao People’s Democratic Republic is the world’s most heavily unexploded ordnance-contaminated na...
During the period of June 1999 to mid-December 2001, the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) ...
The authors argue that survey and clearance methods in areas contaminated solely by unexploded submu...
Over thirty-four years since the 1960-1975 Second Indochina War, Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) continues...
In two Myanmar states, Danish Demining Group and Danish Refugee Council recently conducted a landmin...
In an effort to assess the impact of clearing unexploded ordnance, MAG (Mines Advisory Group) develo...
In central Vietnam, the problem of unexploded ordnance and landmine contamination is still particula...
Efficient and effective land release is a core global priority for MAG (Mines Advisory Group), Norwe...
The February conflict at the Thailand-Cambodia border over disputed territory has left Cambodia with...
Surveys estimate that as much as 83 percent of land in Quang Tri province in Central Vietnam is cont...
Nearly fifty years after the nine-year Secret War (1964–1973), Laos is the scene of a US$35–$40 mill...
This June, the Center for International Stabilization and Recovery (CISR) partnered with Norwegian P...
The landlocked country of Laos borders Burma (Myanmar), Cambodia, China, Thailand and Vietnam
This thesis examines one man-made disaster, resulting from the plethora of UneXploded Ordnance (UXO)...
The Lao National Unexploded Ordnance Programme (UXO Lao) has established a regional office and field...
The Lao People’s Democratic Republic is the world’s most heavily unexploded ordnance-contaminated na...
During the period of June 1999 to mid-December 2001, the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) ...
The authors argue that survey and clearance methods in areas contaminated solely by unexploded submu...
Over thirty-four years since the 1960-1975 Second Indochina War, Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) continues...
In two Myanmar states, Danish Demining Group and Danish Refugee Council recently conducted a landmin...
In an effort to assess the impact of clearing unexploded ordnance, MAG (Mines Advisory Group) develo...
In central Vietnam, the problem of unexploded ordnance and landmine contamination is still particula...